Thecus N4310 4-Bay NAS Review
Bohs Hansen / 10 years ago
Testing Method
Test system:
- Supermicro C7Z87-OCE
- Intel Xeon E3-1230Lv3
- Excelleram EP3001A 2GB PC3-10666
- Corsair H100i
- BeQuiet Dark Power Pro 850W
- Kingston HyperX 240GB SSD
Disks in Product:
- Western Digital RED 6TB 3.5-inch
- Seagate DVR SV35.5 2TB 3.5-inch
- Angelbird SSD2go Pocket 512GB
We would like to thank Be Quiet, Supermicro, Intel, Corsair, Kingston, Lian Li and Western Digital for supplying us with our test components.
Software used:
The performance of the system we use to test with isn’t a major factor when testing a device of this sort. The performance of the NAS box comes down to the network it is running on, the protocol used to connect, and its own internal hardware. With a device of this sort having so many different applications, Intel’s NASPT software covers all the bases and also gives us a set of results that we will be able to utilise and therefore give a benchmark against other similar systems in the future.
Intel NASPT (Network Attached Storage Performance Toolkit) performs its test by transferring varying sizes and quantities of data to and from the device based on twelve different scenarios.
As part of the testing, the NAS is connected through a Netgear GS724TPS managed Gigabit switch and then to our test bench to give the best real world setup test that we can and the NAS itself will be packed with Western Digital’s latest RED NAS drives. Intel’s NASPT software does require us to drop the memory down to 2GB, as using any more would lead to data caching and therefore skew the results.
I will be testing the NAS box performance under each of the RAID options that it has available as well as single drive and JBOD. The USB 3.0 speeds will be measured with our trusted Angelbird SSD2go Pocket drive.